UPnP is an acronym for Universal Plug and Play, a specification for how home media devices connected by a network can discover each other and work together. uPnP is published by the uPnP Forum. May also be known as UPnP or Universal Plug 'n' Play.
Universal Media Server 4 seems to be the only DLNA server which can both stream DTS and add subtitles to a video, but a x86 architecture is required for ffmpeg to do its job properly because subtitles are burned-in. UPnP is an acronym for Universal Plug and Play, a specification for how home media devices connected by a network can discover each other and work together. UPnP is published by the uPnP Forum. May also be known as UPnP or Universal Plug 'n' Play. On QNAP devices, uPnP support is generally supplied by the TwonkyMedia Server software. QNAP NAS supports streaming media players such as Amazon Fire TV, Roku and Apple TV which allow you to transforming your HDTV into a SmartTV. These particular media players grant you to access your multimedia files from your NAS as well. QNAP also has its own streaming app called Qmedia which you can use via Roku or Apple TV.
On QNAP devices, uPnP support is generally supplied by the TwonkyMedia Server software.
See
- TwonkyMedia Server software description
- UPnP Media Server administration interface option
See also
Retrieved from 'https://wiki.qnap.com/mediawiki/index.php?title=UPnP&oldid=1162'
This was the answer I got from Twonky regarding this problem :Thanks for contacting us and explaining your problem.
Indeed, the Qnap 4.3.2 firmware embeds a 64 bits linux system, and the Twonky Server available through the App Center expects 32 bits system libraries.